1,804 research outputs found
Corotational Damping of Diskoseismic C-modes in Black Hole Accretion Discs
Diskoseismic c-modes in accretion discs have been invoked to explain
low-frequency variabilities observed in black-hole X-ray binaries. These modes
are trapped in the inner-most region of the disc and have frequencies much
lower than the rotation frequency at the disc inner radius. We show that
because the trapped waves can tunnel through the evanescent barrier to the
corotational wave zone, the c-modes are damped due to wave absorption at the
corotation resonance. We calculate the corotational damping rates of various
c-modes using the WKB approximation. The damping rate varies widely depending
on the mode frequency, the black hole spin parameter and the disc sound speed,
and is generally much less than 10% of the mode frequency. A sufficiently
strong excitation mechanism is needed to overcome this corotational damping and
make the mode observable.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, MNRAS in pres
Dynamics of the Innermost Accretion Flows Around Compact Objects: Magnetosphere-Disc Interface, Global Oscillations and Instabilities
We study global non-axisymmetric oscillation modes and instabilities in
magnetosphere- disc systems, as expected in neutron star X-ray binaries and
possibly also in accreting black hole systems. Our two-dimensional
magnetosphere-disc model consists of a Keplerian disc in contact with an
uniformly rotating magnetosphere with low plasma density. Two types of global
overstable modes exist in such systems, the interface modes and the disc
inertial-acoustic modes. We examine various physical effects and parameters
that influence the properties of these oscillation modes, particularly their
growth rates, including the magnetosphere field configuration, the velocity and
density contrasts across the magnetosphere-disc interface, the rotation profile
(with Newtonian or General Relativistic potential), the sound speed and
magnetic field of the disc. The interface modes are driven unstable by
Rayleigh-Taylor and Kelvin-Helmholtz in- stabilities, but can be stabilized by
the toroidal field (through magnetic tension) and disc differential rotation
(through finite vorticity). General relativity increases their growth rates by
modifying the disc vorticity outside the magnetosphere boundary. The interface
modes may also be affected by wave absorption associated with corotation
resonance in the disc. In the presence of a magnetosphere, the
inertial-acoustic modes are effectively trapped at the innermost region of the
relativistic disc just outside the interface. They are driven unstable by wave
absorption at the corotation resonance, but can be stabilized by modest disc
magnetic fields. The overstable oscillation modes studied in this paper have
characteristic properties that make them possible candidates for the
quasi-periodic oscillations observed in X-ray binaries.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, MNRAS accepte
Stability of the Magnetopause of Disk-Accreting Rotating Stars
We discuss three modes of oscillation of accretion disks around rotating
magnetized neutron stars which may explain the separations of the kilo-Hertz
quasi periodic oscillations (QPO) seen in low mass X-ray binaries. The
existence of these compressible, non-barotropic magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) modes
requires that there be a maximum in the angular velocity of
the accreting material larger than the angular velocity of the star ,
and that the fluid is in approximately circular motion near this maximum rather
than moving rapidly towards the star or out of the disk plane into funnel
flows. Our MHD simulations show this type of flow and profile.
The first mode is a Rossby wave instability (RWI) mode which is radially
trapped in the vicinity of the maximum of a key function at
. The real part of the angular frequency of the mode is
, where is the azimuthal mode number.
The second mode, is a mode driven by the rotating, non-axisymmetric component
of the star's magnetic field. It has an angular frequency equal to the star's
angular rotation rate . This mode is strongly excited near the radius
of the Lindblad resonance which is slightly outside of . The third mode
arises naturally from the interaction of flow perturbation with the rotating
non-axisymmetric component of the star's magnetic field. It has an angular
frequency . We suggest that the first mode with is associated
with the upper QPO frequency, ; that the nonlinear interaction of the
first and second modes gives the lower QPO frequency, ;
and that the nonlinear interaction of the first and third modes gives the lower
QPO frequency , where .Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Optical Properties and Enhanced Photothermal Conversion Efficiency of SiO2/A-Dlc Selective Absorber Films for A Solar Energy Collector Fabricated by Unbalance Sputter
AbstractSolar energy could become the most attractive alternative energy source. In this study we test an attractive new candidate material for solar energy collectors. It can be found that the higher the gas pressure is, the higher the sp2/sp3 area ratio, the greater the sputtering rate and the greater the optical absorption. The photothermal conversion efficiency of a SiO2 coating on the amorphous diamond-like carbon (a-DLC) selective absorber films deposited on the Cr/mirror like Al substrate is 93.2% as the film thickness of a SiO2 coating is 105nm. The coatings also increase the protective properties for a longer service life. This makes the SiO2 coated a-DLC film a promising new candidate material for solar selective absorber films. The SiO2/a-DLC selective absorber films also were deposited on the Al extrusion substrates
Interface Modes and Their Instabilities in Accretion Disc Boundary Layers
We study global non-axisymmetric oscillation modes trapped near the inner
boundary of an accretion disc. Observations indicate that some of the
quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) observed in the luminosities of accreting
compact objects (neutron stars, black holes and white dwarfs) are produced in
the inner-most regions of accretion discs or boundary layers. Two simple models
are considered in this paper: The magnetosphere-disc model consists of a thin
Keplerian disc in contact with a uniformly rotating magnetosphere with and low
plasma density, while the star-disc model involves a Keplerian disc terminated
at the stellar atomosphere with high density and small density scale height. We
find that the interface modes at the magnetosphere-disc boundary are generally
unstable due to Rayleigh-Taylor and/or Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. However,
differential rotation of the disc tends to suppress Rayleigh-Taylor instability
and a sufficiently high disc sound speed (or temperature) is needed to overcome
this suppression and to attain net mode growth. On the other hand,
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability may be active at low disc sound speeds. We also
find that the interface modes trapped at the boundary between a thin disc and
an unmagnetized star do not suffer Rayleigh-Taylor or Kelvin-Helmholtz
instability, but can become unstable due to wave leakage to large disc radii
and, for sufficiently steep disc density distributions, due to wave absorption
at the corotation resonance in the disc. The non-axisymmetric interface modes
studied in this paper may be relevant to the high-frequency QPOs observed in
some X-ray binaries and in cataclysmic variables.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, submitted to MNRA
Warps, bending and density waves excited by rotating magnetized stars: results of global 3D MHD simulations
We report results of the first global three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic
simulations of the waves excited in an accretion disc by a rotating star with a
dipole magnetic field misaligned from the star's rotation axis (which is
aligned with the disc axis). The main results are the following: (1) If the
magnetosphere of the star corotates approximately with the inner disc, then we
observe a strong one-armed bending wave (a warp). This warp corotates with the
star and has a maximum amplitude between corotation radius and the radius of
the vertical resonance. The disc's center of mass can deviate from the
equatorial plane up to the distance of z_w\approx 0.1 r. However, the effective
height of the warp can be larger, h_w \approx 0.3 r due to the finite thickness
of the disc. Stars with a range of misalignment angles excite warps. However,
the amplitude of the warps is larger for misalignment angles between 15 and 60
degrees. (2) If the magnetosphere rotates slower, than the inner disc, then a
bending wave is excited at the disc-magnetosphere boundary, but does not form a
large-scale warp. Instead, high-frequency oscillations become strong at the
inner region of the disc. These are (a) trapped density waves which form inside
the radius where the disc angular velocity has a maximum, and (b) inner bending
waves which appear in the case of accretion through magnetic Raleigh-Taylor
instability. These two types of waves are connected with the inner disc and
their frequencies will vary with accretion rate. Bending oscillations at lower
frequencies are also excited including global oscillations of the disc. In
cases where the simulation region is small, slowly-precessing warp forms.
Simulations are applicable to young stars, cataclysmic variables, and accreting
millisecond pulsars.Comment: 26 pages, 25 figure
Corotational Instability of Inertial-Acoustic Modes in Black Hole Accretion Discs and Quasi-Periodic Oscillations
We study the global stability of non-axisymmetric p-modes (also called
inertial-acoustic modes) trapped in the inner-most regions of accretion discs
around black holes. We show that the lowest-order (highest-frequency) p-modes,
with frequencies , can be overstable due
to general relativistic effects, according to which the radial epicyclic
frequency is a non-monotonic function of radius near the black hole. The mode
is trapped inside the corotation resonance radius and carries a negative
energy. The mode growth arises primarily from wave absorption at the corotation
resonance, and the sign of the wave absorption depends on the gradient of the
disc vortensity. When the mode frequency is sufficiently high, such that the
slope of the vortensity is positive at corotation positive wave energy is
absorbed at the resonance, leading to the growth of mode amplitude. We also
study how the rapid radial inflow at the inner edge of the disc affects the
mode trapping and growth. Our analysis of the behavior of the fluid
perturbations in the transonic flow near the ISCO indicates that, while the
inflow tends to damp the mode, the damping effect is sufficiently small under
some conditions so that net mode growth can still be achieved. We further
clarify the role of the Rossby wave instability and show that it does not
operate for black hole accretion discs with smooth-varying vortensity profiles.
Overstable non-axisymmetric p-modes driven by the corotational instability
provide a plausible explanation for the high-frequency (> 100 Hz)
quasi-periodic oscillations (HFQPOs) observed from a number of black-hole X-ray
binaries in the very high state. The absence of HFQPOs in the soft (thermal)
state may result from mode damping due to the radial infall at the ISCO.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS in pres
NSrp70 is a novel nuclear speckle-related protein that modulates alternative pre-mRNA splicing in vivo
Nuclear speckles are known to be the storage sites of mRNA splicing regulators. We report here the identification and characterization of a novel speckle protein, referred to as NSrp70, based on its subcellular localization and apparent molecular weight. This protein was first identified as CCDC55 by the National Institutes of Health Mammalian Gene Collection, although its function has not been assigned. NSrp70 was colocalized and physically interacted with SC35 and ASF/SF2 in speckles. NSrp70 has a putative RNA recognition motif, the RS-like region, and two coiled-coil domains, suggesting a role in RNA processing. Accordingly, using CD44, Tra2β1 and Fas constructs as splicing reporter minigenes, we found that NSrp70 modulated alternative splice site selection in vivo. The C-terminal 10 amino acids (531–540), including 536RD537, were identified as a novel nuclear localization signal, and the region spanning 290–471 amino acids was critical for speckle localization and binding to SC35 and ASF/SF2. The N-terminal region (107–161) was essential for the pre-mRNA splicing activity. Finally, we found that knockout of NSrp70 gene in mice led to a lack of progeny, including fetal embryos. Collectively, we demonstrate that NSrp70 is a novel splicing regulator and essentially required early stage of embryonic development
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